California’s tribal land transfer policy (TLTP) doesn’t apply to wireless companies, CTIA said in Friday reply comments at the California Public Utilities Commission. The CPUC is considering updates to the 2019 policy, which directs investor-owned utilities to give tribes notice and a right of first refusal in property sales, in docket 22-02-002. “Applying the TLTP to wireless providers could hinder investment and rapid deployment of 5G networks, and would advance none of the core goals of this proceeding,” wrote CTIA: And it’s unlawful. Extending the TLTP to all telecom carriers would conflict with previous CPUC decisions that exempted certain carriers, agreed Verizon.
Marlon Moody, a former employee at cargo handling company Alliance Ground International, was sentenced to one year in prison for stealing four gold bars that were being shipped from Australia to New York, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Central District of California announced. In April 2020, employees of Alliance, which provides ground handling services at Los Angeles International Airport, were tasked with offloading and securing a shipment of gold bars that were stopping in L.A. en route to New York. The shipment -- a collection of 2,000 gold bars each valued at around $56,000 --- arrived via Singapore Airlines at the direction of a Canadian bank.
Marlon Moody, a former employee at cargo handling company Alliance Ground International, was sentenced to one year in prison for stealing four gold bars that were being shipped from Australia to New York, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Central District of California announced. In April 2020, employees of Alliance, which provides ground handling services at Los Angeles International Airport, were tasked with offloading and securing a shipment of gold bars that were stopping in L.A. en route to New York. The shipment -- a collection of 2,000 gold bars each valued at around $56,000 --- arrived via Singapore Airlines at the direction of a Canadian bank.
Poly shareholders voted to approve HP’s $3.3 billion buy of their company, said Poly Thursday. The transaction is expected to close by the end of calendar 2022, it said. HP has said it believes its “scale” can help relieve Poly of the supply-chain woes that have hampered recent revenue growth for the supplier of audio and video work-from-anywhere solutions (see 2203280036).
DHS published its fall 2022 regulatory agenda for CBP. There were no new trade-related rulemakings included, though upcoming regulations on continuing education requirements for customs brokers is now listed at the final rule stage.
Lithuania barred transport of EU-sanctioned goods via rail lines through its land to the Russian region of Kaliningrad, The Washington Post reported. The Russian government said June 21 that Lithuania would face "serious" consequences for the move. The Lithuanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs said June 20 that the transit of passengers and goods not covered by EU sanctions will continue uninterrupted. The Foreign Ministry pointed to the fourth package of EU sanctions to discuss the trade that had been halted between Lithuania and Kaliningrad -- a Russian area that houses Moscow's Baltic Sea Fleet but has no land connection to the rest of the country -- and that includes steel and other ferrous metal products.
A California Assembly panel cleared a broadband bill to extend until Jan. 1, 2028, California High-Cost Fund A and B programs, set to expire Jan. 1. The Communications Committee voted 11-0 Wednesday to refer SB-857 to the Appropriations Committee. It passed in the Senate last month (see 2205240048). Also, the panel voted 11-0 to clear SB-717 requiring a report including sections on barriers to broadband deployment on government-owned structures, private and public lands and buildings and public rights of way. It would also seek recommendations on improving access and speeding deployment for tribes, low-income customers and underserved communities. The bill goes next to the Natural Resources Committee. The Senate Communications Committee voted 13-0 Wednesday to advance AB-2702 to the Appropriations Committee. The Assembly-passed bill would set a goal for the California Advanced Services Fund public housing account to provide internet connectivity to all public housing residents by Dec. 31, 2025 (see 2205260012).
Ukrainian grain exporters have developed a new export route via the Baltic Sea to get their product out amid Russia's invasion, Bloomberg reported. With ports on the Black Sea no longer an option for the exporters, grain producers have looked to land routes, shipping the product via railway, road and river to other European countries. According to a spokesperson from the Spanish company Puerto A Coruna, the first Ukrainian corn shipment sent via Romania was received in April, and now Spain has received its shipment from Poland, with the vessel carrying 18,000 tons of corn shipped via trucks in Ukraine.
A California Assembly panel cleared a broadband bill to extend until Jan. 1, 2028, California High-Cost Fund A and B programs, set to expire Jan. 1. The Communications Committee voted 11-0 Wednesday to refer SB-857 to the Appropriations Committee. It passed in the Senate last month (see 2205240048). Also, the panel voted 11-0 to clear SB-717 requiring a report including sections on barriers to broadband deployment on government-owned structures, private and public lands and buildings and public rights of way. It would also seek recommendations on improving access and speeding deployment for tribes, low-income customers and underserved communities. The bill goes next to the Natural Resources Committee. The Senate Communications Committee voted 13-0 Wednesday to advance AB-2702 to the Appropriations Committee. The Assembly-passed bill would set a goal for the California Advanced Services Fund public housing account to provide internet connectivity to all public housing residents by Dec. 31, 2025 (see 2205260012).
The Court of International Trade in a June 15 opinion upheld the Commerce Department's final determination in the 2019 antidumping duty investigation on wood mouldings and millwork products from Brazil. Judge Jennifer Choe-Groves ruled that Commerce properly combined the three mandatory respondents -- Araupel, Braslumber Industria de Molduras and BrasPine Madeiras -- into a single entity and correctly didn't apply the major input rule to certain log purchases. Commerce was also right to revise Araupel's general and administrative expenses to account for fair value adjustments associated with the annual revaluation of standing trees in the company's unharvested forests, the court said. The result is a zero percent dumping margin for the collapsed entity.